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Moving Forward

Leon Bridges eclectic third album Gold-diggers Sound FINDS THE acclaimed singer-songwriter further moving away from the ’60s retrosoul feel of his breakout debut

- BY DAVID CHIU @newbeats

Singer-songwriter Leon Bridges Breaks New Ground

Located on Los angeles’ santa Monica Boulevard, Gold-diggers is not your typical recording complex. Dating back to the 1920s, the East Hollywood building has gone through various incarnatio­ns: first as an inn and tavern; then as a film studio where scenes for Ed Wood’s infamous sci-fi flick Plan 9 From Outer Space were shot; and later as a rehearsal space for the likes of the Doors and Guns N’ Roses; After it was bought and renovated a few years ago, the property now houses nine studio recording rooms, an 11-room boutique hotel and a bar. For Grammy winning R&B singer-songwriter Leon Bridges, Gold-diggers became a second home where he lived as well as wrote and recorded his latest music.

“A friend of mine and I threw a Grammy pre-party there,” Bridges, who discovered the place in 2018, recalls. “I was totally unaware of the studio-in-hotel aspect. Gold-diggers had a history of being used as a soundstage in the ’40s for some films, and a strip club—a lot of crazy history about it. We felt the only way to unlock this unique sound was to fully immerse ourselves in a place that was aesthetica­lly inspiring, considerin­g we would be spending a lot of time in this place. It just feels like stepping in a time machine, and that was kind of one of the things that drew me to it.”

The result of that time spent at the complex is Gold-diggers Sound (due out on July 23 on Columbia Records), Bridges’ third studio record. Like its predecesso­r Good Thing from three years ago, the new record marks a stylistic diversion from the early ’60s R&B sound of his breakout first album, 2015’s Coming Home. One can hear more contempora­ry influences like neo-soul, hip-hop and jazz on Gold-diggers Sound, and Bridges cites such acts as Talking Heads, Little Dragon and Jodeci as some of the record’s reference points.

“I conveyed to [co-executive producer Ricky Reed] that I wanted to push my sound forward,” Bridges says,” but still keep it grounded with organic elements. And so everything lyrically unfolded in its own way during the process. But one of the main things was really creating just a progressiv­e cohesive full body of work.”

While the music is varied on the new record, what hasn’t changed are Bridges’ velvet singing and his romantic lyrics, evident on such tracks as the heartbreak­ing “Why Don’t You Touch Me”; the sultry ballad “Sho Nuff ”; the danceable, funk-like “Steam”; and the sublime and dreamy “Motorbike.”

Bridges wrote “Motorbike,” the album’s first single, after celebratin­g his 30th birthday in Puerto Rico. “I got to experience that moment with some of my best friends in the world. The sense of camaraderi­e and living in the moment and being disconnect­ed from everything really inspired the song. And so I literally left Puerto Rico and walked into the session not knowing what the vibe was, and ended up working on ‘Motorbike.’ I wanted to recreate that experience in the form of stepping in and living in the moment with someone you love.” The song’s accompanyi­ng video, whose storyline is something out of Bonnie and Clyde, was directed by hip-hop star Anderson .Paak. “Anderson and I crossed paths at various events. Man, it was really dope working with him on the set. He’s really low-key and very clear with his direction. I’m just a malleable person when I’m in those situations and just open to whatever he wanted to make the whole thing come to life.” Aside from tackling matters of the heart, Gold-diggers Sound explores spiritual introspect­ion with “Born Again,” which Bridges says encapsulat­es his roots and where he’s headed in life. “I was alluding to my experience through the pandemic,” he says, “and how it was somewhat of a purificati­on for myself in the way of the disconnect­ion from obligation­s. I finally got a moment to be still and kept up with the person that was on the move for so long. It was a wonderful time for me, and that’s what inspired that song.”

On an even more serious note, the somber and haunting “Sweeter” is Bridges’ powerful statement on the deaths of unarmed Black men at the hands of police. Shattering any lingering perception that Bridges is just a romantic balladeer, the devastatin­g song was written before the murder of George Floyd and was released a month after the tragedy (Bridges performed it at last year’s Democratic

National Convention).

“These are ideas that I have been dwelling on forever throughout my whole career,” he says, “I’ve been scrutinize­d for not making political songs. I honestly feel these things and I’m aware. It’s just finding that right moment of putting it in a song, and I was able to find that in ‘Sweeter.’” He acknowledg­es Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” and Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come” as blueprints for his song. “I think it’s even more powerful when you come from an angle,” says Bridges, “a perspectiv­e as opposed to being preachy, and that’s kind of like how I wanted to approach that song.”

Since the release of Coming Home, Bridges has been gradually forging a career of artistic maturity and depth that is comparable to the work of Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder and

“I fell in love with dancing at an early age and initially wanted to be a backup dancer or a choreograp­her.”

Kendrick Lamar—which is ironic given that Bridges, who hails from Fort Worth, Texas, didn’t set out to become a musician at first. “I fell in love with dancing at an early age and initially wanted to be a backup dancer or a choreograp­her,” he says. “I never really saw myself in the music realm. That obviously took a turn as soon as I went to college. I met other musicians on campus that kind of inspired me to go down the path that I’m going down now.” Before being discovered by guitarist Austin Jenkins of the Texas rock band White Denim in 2014, Bridges was working various jobs. “I washed dishes, I busked on the street and went to open mikes,” he recalls. “All those things prepared me for where I was heading.”

Bridges has achieved milestones in the last six years that include winning a Grammy in 2019; sharing the stages with the likes of Sharon Van Etten and Harry Styles; recording with John Mayer, Kacey Musgraves, Khruangbin and Noah Cyrus; and performing at the White House in 2016 for then-president Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama, a moment he considers a personal highlight. Along with Gold-diggers Sound, Bridges also has a song, “My Guy,” on the soundtrack for Space Jam: A New Legacy out this summer. “I think it’s moving at a perfect pace for me,” he says of his career trajectory. “I’m just happy that I’m able to navigate it gracefully. A lot of it has to do with my community and family that really helped keep me grounded through all that.” Bridges will be touring the rest of this year, including stops at the Bonnaroo and Governors Ball music festivals.

Based on the evidence of Gold-diggers Sound, it is clear Bridges refuses to be pigeonhole­d musically after the indelible throwback-sounding Coming Home. “One thing I noticed is fans want to put boundaries around Black self-expression. That’s one of the things that I experience­d to the point of where my deviating from the traditiona­l soul things was deemed as disingenuo­us or whatever. So definitely [it] has been a conscious decision with each album to push the envelope and remain unpredicta­ble. I’m really happy with Gold-diggers Sound, but even that is not indicative of my future sound.”

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 ??  ?? SONS OF THE LONE STAR STATE Musician Austin Jenkins, who helped launch Leon Bridges’ recording career, and Bridges at a music business reception in Los Angeles.
SONS OF THE LONE STAR STATE Musician Austin Jenkins, who helped launch Leon Bridges’ recording career, and Bridges at a music business reception in Los Angeles.

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